A look at Desktop Environments: MATE

One of the most amazing things about GNU/Linux is it's customizability, both on a deeper system level but also on the surface with various desktop environments and window managers at the users disposal.

My personal favourite of the various desktop environments is MATE (pronounced Mah-Tay). I started using GNU/Linux about 17 years ago on my buddies computer his uncle set up for him, which used Mandrake Linux, but it wasn't until about six years later when I decided to install Ubuntu on my own machine at home and really dive into learning how to use the operating system that would later become a major part of my life.

Back when I installed Ubuntu it used the Gnome 2 desktop environment, and so I became very familiar with its user interface. Nowadays Gnome has gone a different direction however there is still a huge userbase of people who loved the old interface, and so the MATE project was born out of the ashes of Gnome 2 as a fork of the original code.

MATE, while being based off Gnome 2 has further developed the code and brought forth a plethora of new features and updates, so it gives me that old nostalgic familiarity while still remaining relatively up to date with features; granted not quite as up to date as some of the other desktop environments, but I have yet to find a feature I desperately needed and was lacking.

So, for the first part in this series about the various desktop environments, let's have a look at MATE!

A look at Desktop Environments: MATE

The machine I am using for this has the following specs:

Intel i5-4210U

8GB DDR3

SSD

Using Manjaro as the OS, initially XFCE edition but installing MATE afterwards

This will not be written so much as a scored review, but simply an overview for those who are not familiar with MATE, who may be looking for a change in their day to day happenings and clickings.

Customization and Default Appearance

The default appearance after I installed MATE onto my Manjaro system is honestly hideous in my opinion, but thankfully MATE is very easily themed.

It comes with two panels on the top and bottom of your screen that pretty much have everything you could need readily accessible; albeit perhaps a little more cluttered than some users may prefer.

I prefer to remove the bottom panel, and add a window list to my top panel; this saves a little bit of screen real estate which given that this laptop has a 13" screen is always nice. One thing I do add though is a dock that hides on the bottom of my screen using Docky, with my favourite applications added to it for quick and easy access.

Customizing the appearance of MATE is fairly quick and painless and thankfully has quite a few options for pre-packaged themes and wallpapers to select from.

If you are using the MATE menu with the three "Applications / Places / System" buttons, you can easily access the theme section by clicking System > Preferences > Look and Feel > Appearance and then selecting the theme of choice.

Wallpapers can be accessed by right clicking the desktop and selecting "Change Desktop Background."

MATE has the option of using GTK 2.X as well as GTK 3.X, so there are hundreds of themes available. For more, visit https://www.gnome-look.org

Default Software

MATE comes with all the default software you'd expect from a general user environment, and actually is bundled with my favourite terminal software.

While I admit that KDE has my favourite file manager, Dolphin, the file manager in MATE known as Caja is quite capable and decent all on its own.

MATE also comes with the Eye of MATE Image Viewer, which is a very lightweight but quite capable image viewing program that I have grown quite fond of over the years. It's definitely not the most powerful thing in the world, but it's quite useful.

Overall, any system that runs MATE will have most software you need preinstalled, and the MATE specific tools are all designed to be simple, light, and get the job done.

System resources used

MATE is known as a fairly lightweight environment, albeit not as light as XFCE, LXDE or the even more lightweight window managers like i3 or openbox.

Mate when I closed all software I had open, and shut down Docky, was using around 460MB of RAM only, and around 0.7% of my CPU on both cores -- so very little system resources were being used.

Even when I open Firefox with 40 tabs on google, Caja, Spotify with music playing, Eye of Mate with an image loaded, my terminal and OpenOffice with this tutorial opened; my system reported 1.9GB of RAM being used, so my laptop was able to handle it all without any issues whatsoever.

Final words

I can't stress it enough, I adore MATE. It's light, it's attractive, the software that comes bundled is useful without being overly complex or bogging down the system with bells and whistles you don't need. It's not as fancy as KDE, and it's not as light as XFCE or LXDE; but MATE does what it does well and I have nothing I personally can complain about.

What about you? What's your take on MATE? What DE do you use?

Stay tuned for overviews on other environments to come!

Summary

Article Name

A look at Desktop Environments: MATE

Description

Mike takes a closer look at the desktop environment Mate, and covers customization, default software, and resource usage in the overview.

Author

Mike Turcotte

Publisher

Ghacks Technology News

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Comments

Xfce here, but MATE does look interesting. Hoping to try it some day. I’m using the same layout, one panel, one dock (I found Plank better for my needs). And Caja is pretty great, many options, very good layout, and still light and fast. Been using it for a while now. Thanks for the article!

XFCE is sweet, I love it too. Caja is awesome, but Dolphin is the king of file managers in my eyes.

I recommend you give MATE a whirl sometime, if nothing else its 10 minutes of your time to install and test it out, and if you don’t like it; simply remove it. However, XFCE is definitely a great choice too!

Thanks, I am actually itching to try it, might give it a shot soon. I do agree about Dolphin, tried it, but it was too sluggish on my (not exactly new) PC. Still, definitely the best one out there if you have the horsepower for it.

I occasionally test out different Linux distributions and desktops, but keep coming back to Mint + MATE as my favourite. I have it configured with everything on a single panel at the bottom which I find more convenient than tracking from top to bottom panels.

Firstly sorry for the mix up, didn’t mean to be rude but thought martin had written it. Loved the review but Ubuntu Mate would have been a better choice ? It has some of the best layout/themes etc, would have loved to see it side by side with manjaro but thats me nitpicking.

Looking forward to the LXDE/LXQT + Lubuntu overview, any timeline for it?

DE + managers if i might advise usage tips on like i3 fluxbox etc will be greatly appreciated as most have no clue how to set them up but they are the most non resource hungry.

MATE is always a good DE. I used it because it reminds me of Gnome 2.xx and that makes it better than Cinnamon. But I personally prefer Xfce so I used that the longest. In the past year or so I have been using LXDE as my main DE, but I am growing concerned with their shift to Qt. I tried LXQt in Manjaro and it felt very different. I hope someone would continue to develop LXDE because LXQt is as ugly as KDE.

I really appreciate this. So far I’ve had a peek at KDE Plasma 5, Mate and Cinnamon. I like them all but choosing the DE that suits me best is not a one evening undertaking. Your input will help a lot, otherwise the temptation to line up five computers and use them all as the mood dictates might win out! ;)

Hi Mike, great article. I also started on Mandrake, used Ubuntu with Mate for many years, but recently fell in love with ChaletOS 16.04 running XFCE. Mate on any distro is a great choice. All my 10 PCs are dual booted with Windows and Linux. The linux applications are what keep me coming back to it. They are very robust and stable, without the call for a paid license. The Internet has many articles how major companies, including Google, run their businesses on Linux. Finding wireless drivers is no longer an issue. I sill use Windows when I need to print, scan, or copy a blue ray disc. But I am working on solving these issues. Linux gives us all choices. And that is always a good thing…. :)

I moved to MATE as soon as Gnome lost their minds and made Gnome 3 and MATE picked up Gnome 2. Haven’t bothered with another de much since. LMDE2 Mate hits my comfort zone. I agree with you about the color scheme on initial install. First thing I do is turn everything black lol. That might be my only hang up with MATE ever. Good post btw. I’ve hung around Ghacks for years and it’s good to see the Linux folks coming out.

I’ve been ‘keeping an eye’ on MATE since its technology upgrade is proceeding well; the latest version is now GTK2 free. However, I find its default GNOME 2 style menu unnecessarily awkward to navigate. Give me the Xfce whisker menu any time. Worst of all, the panel customization functionality isn’t up to Xfce standards – just try to find and relocate a transparent widget like a separator or window buttons. The panel preferences desparately needs a expandable separator and a widget list like Xfce and Lxde.

I like xfce in general, but it doesn’t have UI scaling (well it kind of does, but it’s very primitive and incomplete). So I have to find something else for my 4K TV. What’s the scaling situation with MATE?

Looking at MATE I was unamazed. I started using Linux few weeks ago, starting with Linux Mint Cinnamon and now using Linux Mint KDE (everything developed by KDE is so great imo). From my first look at MATE and the filemanager which doesn’t reach either Dolphin nor Nemo, I don’t see myself extensively trying it.

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